Chippewa artist's latest display part of Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto kick-off party - Action News
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Indigenous

Chippewa artist's latest display part of Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto kick-off party

Chippewa artist Jay Soule's latest public art piece was displayed Sunday at the opening party for Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto.

Latest instalment by Jay Soule pops up at ROM launch party

Chippewa artist Jay Soule's latest installation featured mannequins wearing his clothing designs holding a banner. (Submitted by Jay Soule)

Two mannequins with black tape across their mouths holding a sign with a statement about reconciliation woregarments from Chippewar at the opening party for Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto on Sunday.

The last-minute contribution was by Chippewa artist Jay Soule, after organizers reached out to see if he would dress a mannequin.Soulecreatessilkscreen-printedclothing with politically-charged pop art.

"I was kind of nervous thinking, 'What am I going to do? My clothing'sstreet wear,it's not really fashion-fashion,'" he said.

While Soule was initially asked to dress one of the mannequins, he requested a second to also show a ladies outfit.

"In the back of my mind I wassetting it up, knowing that I want to have both mannequins and then have a banner going between them," saidSoule.

He placedthe tape across the mouths at the last minute to signify Indigenous people being seen and not heard.

The banner is part of a series of public displays by Soulein Toronto aimed at creatinga dialogue about issues facing Indigenous communities.

The mannequins for the Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto opening party at the Royal Ontario Museum are the most recent edition ofSoule's billboard projects.

The spark

Earlier this year, after the acquittal of Saskatchewanfarmer Gerald Stanley in thedeathof Colten Boushie, Soule was listening to an episode of Duncan McCue's Cross Country Checkup that has been dedicatedto Boushie.

Onecaller caught Soule's ear.

"An older gentleman called in and he said some really generalized racist remarks about howwe'vegot to stop using tax dollars to pay for these Indians," said Soule.

Jay Soule's billboard project was aimed at raising awareness and starting discussions. (Submitted by Jay Soule)

"I was having one of those moments where you'rescreaming at the radio."

He redirected his frustration into the first in a series of billboards and banners that have been appearing in Toronto and online.

At the corner of Spadina Avenue and Richmond Street W., Soule placed the first banner that addressed the myth that tax dollars go to First Nations, explaining howthe monies received are payment from land and resources, treaty annuities, and interest payments from a federally-controlled trust fund.

A table, some chairs and a dialogue

The banner used at the ROM installation hadbeen used previously whenSouleset up in theintersectionwherethesecond of his billboard series was installed.

Soulesaidhe wasInspired by anInternetmeme of a man sittingbehind a table with a banner that read, "Maleprivilegeis a myth, change my mind."

"I thought 'I'll become a meme,' so I made the banner, took a table and chairs and went down in front of the billboard," he said.

Most of the feedback he received that day was positive and opened up a dialogue about the meaning of reconciliation.

Set up in front of the second piece of his billboard project, Jay Soule sits at a busy Toronto intersection asking people to change his mind about the statement on the banner. (Submitted by Jay Soule)

Since then Soule has installed another billboard in the same space as the first.

"I use my voice as an artist to put out these ideas and these messages," he said.

Soule saidhe hopes his work will plant seeds of thought with people who see the pieces andencourage constructiveconversations around controversial topics and assumptions surrounding Indigenous people.

"It's our job as Indigenous people just to take up space and Indigenize it," he said.

"I try to infuse Indigenous culture into spaces where it wouldn't have ever been."

Soule will have a booth set up at the Indigenous Fashion Week Toronto marketplace June 2-3.